Employability programmes 2021-25: challenges and opportunities

1st July 2020

The Department of Work & Pensions (DWP) launched a new commercial agreement this week for Employment and Health Related Services (CAEHRS). This new Framework replaces the existing Umbrella Agreement, which expires in January 2021. CAEHRS will be the primary mechanism used to procure DWP’s future strategic objectives over the next four years. The Framework is designed to facilitate the provision of Employment and Health related services to the government and other contracting bodies in England, Wales and Scotland. It will operate for a maximum of five years with a potential maximum value of £7.5 billion.

The current economic climate is evidently different to when the last Framework was procured five years ago. The impact of Covid-19 (with the full impact still unclear) means that unemployment has reached unprecedented levels, and Brexit is forecast to increase unemployment in the short to medium term, as the UK adjusts to the impact of leaving the EU. Even before Covid-19, the UK only narrowly avoided entering a recession.  

What does this mean for DWP? The market has evolved since DWP last procured a largescale employability service (Work Programme) in 2012. Only a handful of Work Programme Prime Contractors still operate in the employability market and a lot of knowledge and skills has been lost. Given the current economic crisis, developing a market and attracting new entrants will be a challenge, but also provides a potential opportunity for new ‘players’.

The nature of the economy has also changed. Growth in the gig economy, self-employment and a demand for a greater work life balance has created a more flexible labour market. 

We believe that the help and support offered to customers needs to change significantly. Wage progression linked to conditionality underpins the principles behind Universal Credit, meaning customers will require upskilling once they enter employment… so offering a wider range of post-employment support will be a fundamental part of any new service. 

Many customers working in certain sectors i.e. service/hospitality have been adversely affected by Covid-19 and will need extra support and re-training to access alternative employment. Youth unemployment continues to rise and must be addressed urgently if we are to develop a new post-Brexit workforce.

Organisations looking to tender for future programmes will need to demonstrate that they possess the core functions required to deliver a quality service. This includes technology, links to employers, strong stakeholder links, skilled workforce and quality assurance processes. Experience shows that organisations tend to be good at some of these things, but rarely all of them.

The indications are that these new challenges will require a new approach, and a different programme will need to be developed. Both Government and DWP acknowledge the need to procure programmes on a larger scale to meet these challenges. 

This is, of course, only the tip of the iceberg and there are many more factors to consider including how today’s provider network will respond to the challenge of higher client volumes; standardisation versus local models; the involvement of devolved programmes; technology… and more. 

We’ll be taking a look at these issues in our upcoming blogs.

 

 

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